In this post, Rebecca Burgess, a Grade 3 teacher in Denver, Colorado, shares how she supports multilingual students in her classroom. Some of Rebecca’s students receive explicit Spanish-language support, while others receive scaffolds and supports she intentionally plans for with resources available in Wit & Wisdom® materials.
I was excited to introduce our guest reader to my class of superheroes. All of my students have unique powers that help them contribute to the world. One group of students has an especially potent superpower: They speak multiple languages. Our guest reader walked into the classroom, introduced herself, and announced, “I will be reading this book in both English and Spanish.” Several bilingual students threw their hands up, some jumped out of their seats, and one proudly squealed, “I also speak Spanish!” I explained to our guest reader that we have many multilingual superheroes in our classroom. They beamed with pride. Tears glistened in my eyes while our guest read. Our MLLs didn’t always know how powerful they are, so my co-teacher and I had been intentionally building confidence in our multilingual learners all year. This moment was evidence of our success.
I just finished my fourth year teaching Grade 3 students with Wit & Wisdom in Denver, Colorado. At our school, 85 percent of our students are multilingual learners—they speak more than one language, and, often, their first (or even second) language is not English. Wit & Wisdom is ideal for all learners, and I have watched our multilingual learners thrive with this knowledge-building curriculum.
Our I-Ready data quantitatively show the impact Wit & Wisdom is having on our students.
How is this possible?
Knowledge travels well between languages. Even when multilingual learners struggle to express their ideas in English, they still come to us full of prior knowledge. Wit & Wisdom continues to build on what students know, but sometimes multilingual learners need additional language support to connect what they know in one language to the knowledge they’re building in their new language. This year, I had the opportunity to collaborate with a Spanish literacy teacher, and we were eager to explore how to help students build and access knowledge in both English and Spanish.
With the help of Ms. Gonzalez, my Spanish literacy colleague, our Spanish bilingual students have been able to access Wit & Wisdom tasks in both English and Spanish: They write their essays and hold Socratic Seminar discussions in both languages. We’re strategic about which parts of the lessons receive Spanish-language support, and Ms. Gonzalez invests time into internalizing the lessons and translating content into Spanish.
Here are a few examples of the heroic work our students have accomplished this year:
I believe that the ability of Ms. Gonzalez to work so closely with our Spanish-speaking students, our intentional collaboration, and the way we celebrate knowledge building in two languages are all a big part of why our multilingual learners are proud of their superpower to communicate across languages and cultures. The opportunity to stretch their knowledge across two worlds has encouraged our students to embrace their linguistic tools, rather than shying away from them.
We have many students in our school who speak languages other than English or Spanish, and those students are still making incredible growth too. Here are four ways to support students who speak multiple languages with Wit & Wisdom instruction:
For additional guidance on what supports are available for multilingual learners, please read our "What's New in Wit & Wisdom" blog post.
Every multilingual learner is a superhero working to hone their incredible language skills to communicate across both English and their home language(s). It’s our job as educators to see them as the superheroes they are and let them know it—while also providing the supports that will help them grow their literacy skills. With the right tools—a thoughtfully scaffolded curriculum, many opportunities to read, write, and discuss, and intentional language instruction through the Deep Dives—our multilingual learners will learn to use their superpowers to make their future even brighter.